Yahoo – AFP,
March 19, 2017
The last large coal-fired power plant in Beijing has suspended operations, with the city's electricity now generated by natural gas, the state news agency reported as smog enveloped the Chinese capital this weekend.
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The last large coal-fired power plant in Beijing has suspended operations, with the city's electricity now generated by natural gas (AFP Photo/Wang Zhao) |
The last large coal-fired power plant in Beijing has suspended operations, with the city's electricity now generated by natural gas, the state news agency reported as smog enveloped the Chinese capital this weekend.
The
shuttering of the Huaneng Beijing Thermal Power Plant comes on the heels of
China's annual legislative sessions, where Premier Li Keqiang promised to
"make our skies blue again" in his state-of-the-nation speech.
According
to Xinhua, Beijing has become the country's first city to have all its power
plants fuelled by natural gas, an objective laid out in 2013 in the capital's
five-year clean air action plan.
The
Huangneng plant is the fourth to be closed and replaced by gas thermal power
centres between 2013 and 2017, cutting nearly 10 million tonnes in coal
emissions annually.
Xinhua
reported the move the night before municipal authorities issued a blue alert
for heavy air pollution on Sunday.
Smog has
cloaked the capital for several days and is expected to continue through the
week.
Since last
Wednesday' closing of the National People's Congress, the annual meeting of
China's rubber-stamp parliament, PM2.5 (harmful particulate) levels have
remained between 200 and 330 micrograms per cubic metre -- well above the World
Health Organization's recommended maximum average exposure of 25 micrograms per
cubic metre in a 24-hour period.
The
pollution often vanishes during prominent events like the legislative sessions
and the 2008 Summer Olympics as authorities order factories to halt activity
and force cars off the road.
During the
2014 gathering of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation in Beijing, this clear
air phenomenon was dubbed "APEC blue."
During the
one-week-and-a-half period of the NPC, average PM2.5 levels hovered between 50
and 80, despite exceeding 200 micrograms per cubic metre just one day before
the opening of the parliamentary sessions on March 5.
In response
to a reporter's question about this disparity at his annual press conference
last Wednesday, Li repeated his pledge to target coal-burning and vehicle
emissions.
"We
may not be able to control the weather, but we can adjust our behaviour and our
way of development," he said.
"Blue
skies should no longer be a luxury, nor will they be."
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